We are training world lovers and we want to share with you our vision of the sector: we will analyse the most innovative trends, we will discover new technologies and we will share with you opinions of the most important referents.

Whether you are a company, a publishing house, a training professional, or you are simply interested in seeing what is cooking, i-love learning is your blog.

i-love learning events

Once a year we hold a face-to-face meeting in which the participants discover the new trends and their possible applications to real cases.

We are training world lovers and we want to share with you our vision of the sector: we will analyse the most innovative trends, we will discover new technologies and we will share with you opinions of the most important referents.

Whether you are a company, a publishing house, a training professional, or you are simply interested in seeing what is cooking, i-love learning is your blog.

i-love learning events

Once a year we hold a face-to-face meeting in which the participants discover the new trends and their possible applications to real cases.

Gamification is becoming increasingly popular as a learning tool. But whilst there is much talk on the subject, there is also a lot of misunderstanding. The most frequent of these mistakes is the assumption that gamification is about the inclusion of stand-alone games in elearning. It is not. It is about the using gameplay mechanics; that is the construct of rules and rewards that encourage users to explore and learn through the use of feedback mechanisms and awards.

In 1986, Eddy Shah founded the UK newspaper Today. For the newspaper industry it was a landmark occasion with new printing techniques and practices changing everything they knew. But the paper’s readers will remember it for one thing – colour printing. Unions argued about it. Critics questioned it. But newspaper publishing was never the same again. New technology had irrevocably changed the whole business.

Over a quarter of a century has passed since those heady days. But change is …

In 1986, Eddy Shah founded the UK newspaper Today. For the newspaper industry it was a landmark occasion with new printing techniques and practices changing everything they knew. But the paper’s readers will remember it for one thing – colour printing. Unions argued about it. Critics questioned it. But newspaper publishing was never the same again. New technology had irrevocably changed the whole business.

Over a quarter of a century has passed since those heady days. But change is …